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NAYARIT - MEXICO- 2 bodyguards of Vice Admiral, Carlos Armando Martínez de Anda of the Sixth Naval Zone of Puerto de San Blas de la Marina Armada de Mexico were shot dead by an armed group in the town of Tepic. An armed group shot dozens of occasions against the marines as they entered the Plaza Forum shopping center located on the Boulevard Luis Donaldo Colosio in the colony Ladrilleras on the parking lot outside restaurant Sanborn's Store. Initial investigations indicate the two marines of Navy's Sixth Naval Zone of Puerto de San Blas, were executed at 13:36 hours on Monday. The double execution took place moments after the Admiral, Carlos Armando Martínez de Anda in the company of his wife entered the mall to do some shopping. The marines were parking the Chevrolet Malibu car with official registration 606010 of the Navy Department used by the naval commander at the time they were surprised by an armed group. The shooting caused panic among hundreds of guests that were in the mall on this holiday in the town of Tepic. Customers of the shopping center were kept in warehouses inside the mall as a security measure, after 45 minutes were evacuated by the Mexican Army

A four and one half hour battle between the Gulf Cartel and the Mexican army which left over fifty people dead including the leader of the Cartel. Mexico, war, battle, drugs, narcotics, illegal, guns, live, death, blood, bullets, witness, ricochet, close, gun, aftermath, grenades, noise

www.facebook.com We traveled to Juarez Mexico, currently considered the most dangerous city in the world because of it's homicide rate - averaging about 10 murders a day. The cause of the violence? A raging war between drug cartels over Juarez's key smuggling routes into the US. We report on the efforts the Mexican and US governments are making to combat the cartels and end the violence.

www.briligg.com/legalize-drugs.html Along the Mexican border, people live in fear. Shoot-outs like the one above happen weekly. Reporters are kidnapped, murdered, even tortured to death. People hear gunfire, huddle in their homes, and the next day there is nothing about it in the news, as though it never happened. They can´t trust their own police, they can´t trust the government. You can help these people. Call for drugs to be legalized. The website above makes the case - there is nothing to fear, but a future where a drug war goes on and on and on.

Mexican marines discover an apparent massacre on a ranch in northern Mexico, following a series of firefights with drug gang members. Northern Mexico has seen some of the bloodiest drug violence this year. Mexican officials hold a news conference following a gruesome discovery on a ranch in the northern Mexico state of Tamaulipas. Military forces came across the bodies of 58 men and 14 women, thought to be migrant workers, after a series of firefights with drug gang members. This comes as the single biggest discovery of its kind in Mexico's increasingly bloody drug war. But one person survived the massacre. The Ecuadoran man, who is recovering from gunshot wounds at a nearby hospital, escaped the ranch and tipped off marines at a local checkpoint. Navy Vice Admiral Jose Luis Vergara spoke to reporters in Mexico City. [Jose Luis Vergara, Navy Vice Admiral]: "On the highway checkpoint located close to the town of San Fernando Tamaulipas, navy personnel requested medical help on behalf of a man because he was injured by gun fire. The person gave information about the execution of approximately 70 people by Los Zetas." Mexican officials say the bodies were dumped about the ranch, and had not been buried. In recent years Mexican cartels have moved into human smuggling, sometimes kidnapping migrants, extorting them, and forcing them to carry narcotics across the US border. Some are even forced to become hitmen. Northern Mexico has become the scene of some of the bloodiest drug ...

From the Associated Press "CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico — The first successful car bombing by a drug cartel brings a new dimension of terror to a Mexican border region already shocked by random street battles, bodies dangling from bridges and highway checkpoints mounted by heavily armed criminals. The attack, seemingly lifted from an al-Qaida playbook, demonstrated once again that the cartels are a step ahead of both an already guarded public and federal police, who have recently taken over command from the military of the battle against traffickers in Ciudad Juarez, a city across the border from El Paso, Texas. "It's a lot like Iraq," said Claudio Arjon, who owns a restaurant near the scene of the attack and was surveying the damage from behind police lines Saturday morning. "Now, things are very different. It's very different. It's very ugly."

June 28, 2010 A leading candidate for governor of a Mexican state has been gunned down in an ambush while campaigning in the northern state of Tamau-lipas. Felipe Calderon, the Mexican president, blamed drug gangs for Monday's killing of Rodolfo Torre, saying it was evidence that gangs were trying to infiltrate the election process. Some 25000 people have been killed since Calderon came into office in 2006 and launched a crackdown on drug gangs and related violence. Al Jazeera's Mariana Sanchez reports from the town of Nuevo Laredo in Tamau-lipas. (June 29, 2010)

From: www.youtube.com June 12, 2010 Felipe Calderon, the president of Mexico, has condemned the latest killings linked to the country's drugs war. The bodies of 18 men and two women were found in different areas of Ciudad Madero. Many were riddled with bullets and were gagged and handcuffed. In a separate attack 350km north, armed men shot dead 19 people at a drug rehabilitation centre in Chihuahua. Al Jazeera's Mariana Sanchez reports on a city seeing a surge in drug-related killings. [June 12, 2010] FAIR USE NOTICE: This video may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes only. This constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 USC section 107 of the US Copyright Law.

A noon shootout left six police officers and a civilian dead on the streets of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, Friday, city officials said. Mayor Jose Reyes Ferriz said five of the dead were federal police officers and one was a female city officer, all part of the joint police task force formed to combat drug violence in the border town. Another federal officer was gravely wounded, Reyes said, and a city officer was wounded but not with life-threatening injuries. A civilian was hit by shrapnel but those injuries were also not serious, he added. Reyes said the incident began when two patrol cars, one from federal police and one from city police, stopped several people they had been investigating.

Abduction in Holiday INN Mexico, Comando armado irrumpe en hoteles y secuestra a 6 en Monterrey Monterrey hotel attacked in Mexico kidnappings The hotel assault was reportedly mounted by up to 50 gunmen who seized cars to block streets, slowing the police. At least three people were kidnapped in the attack bearing hallmarks of drug violence. April 21, 2010|By Ken Ellingwood, Los Angeles Times Reporting from Mexico City — In a bold predawn attack, gunmen stormed a hotel Wednesday in the heart of the northern city of Monterrey and kidnapped at least three people, officials said. Mexican media said up to 50 hooded gunmen arrived in a convoy and burst into the downtown Holiday Inn, seizing guests and employees.

A classified report provided by the government to senators estimated 22743 people have died since President Felipe Calderon declared war on Mexicos drug cartels in December 2006, the press reported. Government sources confirmed the figure to Efe, but they insisted that the report was classified and would not provide further details, adding that the number includes executions (killings by organized crime groups), attacks and clashes. Press tallies had put the number of people killed in drug-related violence since Calderon took office at 18000. The classified report provided by the National Security Cabinet to senators lists 20868 killed in hits, 160 deaths in attacks and 1715 deaths in shootouts, the Reforma newspaper reported. The most violent year of Calderons presidency, according to the report, was 2009, when 8928 people were killed. The classified report estimates the death toll so far this year at 2904. Chihuahua led the way as the state with the highest number of killings, followed by Sinaloa, Guerrero, Baja California and Michoacan. Ciudad Juarez, a border metropolis in Chihuahua, is Mexicos most violent city, followed by Culiacan, the capital of Sinaloa state, and Tijuana, a border city in Baja California. Government Secretary Fernando Gomez Mont answered a reporters question about the existence of a classified report by saying that a figure was discussed at a meeting Monday with legislators, but he claimed he could not recall the number. Calderon, who made ...

After three years of bloody gangland warfare and over 5000 murders, the mayor of Ciudad Juárez comes to Austin, Texas to talk openly about the struggle to combat drug violence and police corruption in Mexico.

Last month, a US consulate worker and her husband were killed in the Mexican border town of Ciudad Juárez. The gunfire sent scores of journalists scrambling across the bridge from El Paso and prompted Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to pledge more than $300 million to help border cities like Juárez recover from the blight of drug violence. But the spotlight on Juárez masks a broader trend in Mexico: since President Felipe Calderón launched a crackdown on cartels in 2007, the violence has spread south from the border, emptying tourist destinations and shaking the country's largest cities. New cartels have sprung up in once-quiet states and veteran cartels have grown more violent. Calderón has succeeded in capturing and killing key cartel leaders, or jefes, but his drug war has left the entire country dangerously in disarray. "It's obvious that the drug cartels also operate here in the capital," said security expert José Luís Piñeyro, speaking from Mexico City. "We have a major international airport through which they receive drugs from Colombia, weapons from the United States and methamphetamines or pre-cursor chemicals" from all over the world. Earlier this week, Mexico City mayor Marcelo Ebrard admitted that narcos "come and go" as they please in the capital of 20 million. US Drug Enforcement Administration officials privately admit that cartel leaders live in the city's lush suburbs--"they just happen to be smarter about who they kill and when" than in other parts of ...

Ten Mexican students were killed on Sunday after stopping at a checkpoint run by drug traffickers in the state of Durango. The dead included three girls, ages eight, eleven and thirteen; the rest were all teenagers except for a twenty-one-year-old. The students were on their way to receive government scholarships as part of a federal program called Opportunities that supports low-income students. The killings are believed to have been carried out by the Zetas, one of the largest drug cartels in Mexico. The Zetas was formed by former Mexican soldiers who were trained by the United States in the mid-1990s at the School of the Americas in Fort Benning, Georgia. -- Democracy Now The full story: www.latimes.com Join The Daily Conversation on Facebook tinyurl.com Follow our Tweets for new videos twitter.com Background image can be found here: www.flickr.com With permission under creative commons license: creativecommons.org

Mexican drug cartels are suspected in the March 14 killings of three people including two American citizens with ties to the US consulate in Juarez. The targeted killings may signal a fresh escalation in the border wars, analyst Scott Stewart says.

According to an independent tally RECENTLY RELEASED by the El Universal DAILY, An estimated 7026 people have died in drug- related violence so far this year in Mexico. A third of the killings, or a staggering 2991 deaths, reportedly took place ON THE US BORDERING northern state of Chihuahua. The troubled city of Ciudad Juarez is in the same state. The count shows that there were 1026 drug-related killings in Mexico in the past 48 days alone, an average of more than 21 per day. Last year close to 6400 people died in clashes between police and drug traffickers, between different drug gangs or in executions by the gangs. Included in the report, it is stated drug-related violence reportedly claimed more than 15507 lives Since Mexican President Felipe Calderon was inaugurated on December 1, 2006. Calderon has focused on fighting the country's powerful drug lords, with tens of thousands of federal police and military officers deployed across Mexico.

Ciudad Juarez has had almost 2000 homicides — almost all brutal executions — through mid-October this year, up from 1171 for the same period in 2008. There have been 195 murders in the first half of this month alone. The killings, averaging seven a day in the city of 1.5 million, can be blamed on an escalating drug war between the Sinaloa cartel run by Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, the most-wanted man in Mexico, and the Juarez Cartel. The cartels are fighting to control the lucrative smuggling route between Ciudad Juarez and El Paso, just across the border in Texas. While Ciudad Juarez is clearly the most violent city in Mexico, cartel battles continue to take lives throughout the country.